How to lessen the impact of an appalling military death toll - 103

tank girl

New Member
Must be getting desperate, huh?

US PLANS "ROBOT TROOPS" FOR IRAQ

The US military is planning to deploy robots armed with machine-guns to wage war against insurgents in Iraq.
BBC

at least they're not ruining the lives of countless more gullible young soldiers.. :shrug:
 
tank girl said:
Must be getting desperate, huh?

US PLANS "ROBOT TROOPS" FOR IRAQ


BBC

at least they're not ruining the lives of countless more gullible young soldiers.. :shrug:

"En"quiring minds wanna know. :lol:
 
Robots is better'n dolphins and monkeys.



Mr Quinn says there are plans to replace the computer screen, joysticks and keypad in the remote-control unit with a Gameboy-style controller and virtual-reality goggles.
lol, recruitment numbers++
 
:gun3:


A Powerful Robot Will Help Our Troops in Iraq
BY Michael Fumento
http://www.tri-cityherald.com/24hour/opinions/story/2015690p-10038539c.html


(SH) - It's "one of the most amazing inventions of 2004," according to Time Magazine. But to terrorists in Iraq it may be the scariest. By April, GIs there will be deploying 18 robots so small they could almost crawl between your legs. Don't let size fool you though; these motorized midgets pack a powerful punch. They can fire machine guns, a six-barreled 40-millimeter grenade launcher, and multiple rocket systems.

The Sword is the first armed variant of a track-wheeled robot developed by Foster-Miller of Waltham, Mass., called the TALON. That machine proved itself in Bosnia, Afghanistan, and Iraq in removing mines and other explosives. TALON robots have now completed more than 20,000 such missions and I was proud to find Internet photos of my former unit using them to protect Afghans.

The robo-warrior version has no independent capabilities like a T1 Terminator; rather it uses an outside operator with a viewing screen and joystick control. And like its flying cousin the Predator, its main job isn't killing but reconnaissance. Swords can be equipped with off-the-shelf chemical, gas, temperature, and radiation sensors. They carry up to seven cameras of any combination including thermal, night vision, zooms, and wide area.

But like the Predator, when opportunity strikes it can too.

No offense to our soldiers' skill, but Swords are much better shots. That's because in the fear and confusion of a firefight, maintaining full composure is virtually impossible. In Vietnam, it took about 50,000 rounds to kill a single enemy. The Sword reduces that to something closer to the sniper's motto of: "One shot, one kill," because the operator is hidden anywhere from 200 to 1,000 meters away. He can coolly pick out targets as if playing a video game.

The Sword has many other advantages. It might get shot up but will never come home to grieving parents. Even in cold economic terms it could be better to lose a Sword considering that the cost of simply training a soldier to get him to his first duty station is an estimated $50,000. A sergeant might represent an investment of hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Another economic advantage is that those spent 50,000 rounds cost about $25,000. The price of the initial 18 Swords is $230,000 each. But according to Foster-Miller spokesman Arnis Mangolds that's already been reduced to about $170,000 for the second set of 18 being made and could drop much further if manufactured on an assembly line. The terrorists aren't just trying to bleed us dry in blood but also in money; the Sword will slash away at both efforts.

The robo-warriors are ideal for ambushes. The need to sleep, eat, and excrete all limit the ability of even top soldiers to lay in wait. (I learned as a soldier that few things are more exhausting than lying absolutely still for hours on end.) But the Sword can sit patiently in "sleep mode" in any weather for as long as seven days. Upon detecting the enemy, it would alert its operator and could directly contact those who can call in air strikes or artillery. The Sword could then join in.

Their main protection is their tiny size - about 30 inches feet tall, 22 inches wide, and 34 inches long. Further, "All the critical components are to the rear so bullets fired from the front would have to get through a lot of claptrap," says Mangolds.

If knocked over, a Sword dusts itself off and gets back on its treads. Nor is terrain a problem with these steel soldiers. They can climb stairs, go over rock piles, overcome concertina wire, plow through snow, and go through water. A Talon knocked off an Iraqi bridge into the river below was retrieved with its remote control.

Because it weighs merely 120 pounds, the Sword is easy to transport. Its size also makes it ideal for cave openings so tiny a man has to wriggle through them. A Sword might be the last thing a hiding Osama bin Laden ever sees.

With its capabilities steadily improving, the Sword will prove an important weapon both in killing terrorists and saving American lives. Now if they could only get it to say "Hasta la vista, baby!"

:bgtup:

Bwahahahaha

"One shot one kill"---sweet

The ultimate sniper=more dead islamoterrorists :gun6:

I can hear the lib whine now: "Man, it's not fair! I mean--dude--the insurgent resistance is out there everyday risking their lives to defend what is theirs' while the warmonger's army is kicked back playing video games that kill innocent Iraqis! "
 
LOL, I remember back in the 70s, and 80s thinking that by the year
2000 this tech would already be in play, hovercraft cars too, :nerd:
 
Give'em a decent IFF, ground-level radar, IR and a half-decent AI and just drop'em and forget'em.

Imagine 1,000 of the little terrors being parachuted down into an area and just let loose. Go in a few days later to collec
t the bodies ...

SWORDSposter.jpg
 
Why turn 'em loose when can make recoup some of the cost.


The ultimate gamers game. "TALON - Iraqi insurgent". $200 per TALON-machine with a full load of ammo and a battery charge.

imagine the talon-clans that would pop-up.

There is a army of gamers waiting to play the realism.

37337 - 747oN
 
hell maybe someone could set up webcams on the streets and we could just sit home in our living rooms and take people out as they walk by, like that webcam hunting club that guy was trying to set up.
 
Leslie said:
hell maybe someone could set up webcams on the streets and we could just sit home in our living rooms and take people out as they walk by, like that webcam hunting club that guy was trying to set up.
Nah..too much time-delay...we'd keep missing. Especailly the kids...they're pretty small targets as it is.
 
ResearchMonkey said:
Why turn 'em loose when can make recoup some of the cost.


The ultimate gamers game. "TALON - Iraqi insurgent". $200 per TALON-machine with a full load of ammo and a battery charge.

imagine the talon-clans that would pop-up.

There is a army of gamers waiting to play the realism.

37337 - 747oN
They'd keep shooting at each other to help win the tourney... or putting their names on the walls with their flamethrowers. It'd have to be Rated-R+ to play.
 
All these toys. When will the war-despising apologists realize we've lost incredibly few soldiers to war tactics? Hell, we're smacking 'em down, about 1000:1 in the war department. The problem is road side/car bombs. What we need is a mine sweeper.
 
Sorry to say but innocent bystanders should get out of the damn way while they have a chance.....anyone hanging around in a combat zone is asking for trouble.
 
Raven said:
Sorry to say but innocent bystanders should get out of the damn way while they have a chance.....anyone hanging around in a combat zone is asking for trouble.

There is no such thing as an innocent bystander. If that person is there, and is not aiding one side actively, then they are hindering the other side passively. Gawkers, IMO, should be shot...especially if they are of breeding age.
 
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